What tipped me off was back in 2011, when, after questioning Barack Obama’s eligibility for the presidency based on his country of birth was thoroughly discredited in the mainstream media, out pops Donald Trump to question it. He got lots of media attention like the View, and wasn’t viciously attacked as racist and a conspiracy nut in the same way anyone else would be, and after actual lawyers like Philip Berg who filed lawsuits got zero mass media attention. And then when Obama released a long-form birth certificate that some people were also questioning on the basis of a Photoshop analysis, Trump suddenly dropped the matter, saying Obama was born in the U.S. (Actually, natural born citizenship was clarified in the 1790 Naturalization Act as being conferred on those born to parents both already U.S. citizens, and not conferred based on place of birth, as the requirement of native born citizen would have done).

And his later behaviour subsequently confirmed it for me all the more, because of repeatedly doing things to boost Hillary’s demographics that she was relatively poor in resonating with compared to past Democratic presidential candidates, particularly Obama and Bill Clinton. Namely, women, Blacks, and moderate Hispanics.

So whether it was Trump making it sound to the untrained ear that most Mexicans were criminals (as opposed to the context of the “bad hombres” among the illegal immigrants in particular), or questioning the Mexican-American’s judge impartiality based on his Mexican heritage as opposed to being part of a “racist” group, La Raza, or musing that women may be criminally punished for their abortions, or repeatedly questioning Obama’s place of birth after he had laid it to rest in 2011, all those things served to boost Hillary’s flagging demographics.

A sign of what would come if he were to be elected, or of him not being a serious candidate, was what I hadn’t even noticed had changed until the second debate, when he had replaced his initial call in December 2015 for a temporary ban on all Muslims entering the United States so they “can figure out what the hell is going on” to his August 2016 policy of “extreme vetting,” which is a poorly named term as it makes it look bad, compared to the predictable use of moderate-sounding words for bad things, like “enhanced interrogation” vs. torture.

And I simply have to question what was the point of him repeatedly doing and saying things that boosted her problematic demographics for someone who demonstrated such a relatively polished image in The Apprentice in taking his time to make decisions and relying on the advice of his top advisers, instead of “shooting from the hip” as he repeatedly insisted on doing during the election campaign.

And there were things he said and did in the campaign that he wouldn’t have tolerated from would-be employee contestants on his show, such as saying that he loves the poorly educated. For someone who has repeatedly bragged about getting his degree from Wharton and saying it was better than even Harvard, such a statement was naked political opportunism at best, and nudge-nudge-wink-wink controlled opposition disingenuous opportunism at worst.

And when he felt he didn’t have the best debate performance at the second debate, he later blamed microphone problems, and that is laughable when you consider how fast he would fire a would-be employee contestant who did the same thing during one of their big presentations. Despite it being conceded that there was a problem with his mic, he wouldn’t have accepted from a would-be employee contestant to raise it after the presentation was over, and as a way of blaming a relatively lacklustre performance compared to the third debate which he excelled in. Instead, he would’ve expected of an employee in a leadership role the same thing he would normally expect of himself, in taking full personal responsibility.

That being said, to rebut a key smear against Trump, he is no racist. He has only implicitly used race as a purely political tactic, in my estimation. There was an episode of the Apprentice where he quickly fired a contestant for referring to himself as White Trash, because of the contestant’s insecurities growing up in small-town White America, and one of Trump’s assistants, who was Black, said that sounded very bad of him to say that, and Trump ultimately fired the guy because it showed low self-esteem. In a similar way, Trump never treated non-White contestants with any less high standards, and, indeed a Black man was the runner-up in the first Apprentice and would’ve won were it not for thoroughly botching the last competition, and the fault was solely his own mismanagement of his team.

As for Trump’s original Obama birth certificate stunt, that was a matter of him doing a service for Obama and dampening down any questions about his eligibility among any doubtful Republicans. His subsequent re-questioning of it in 2016 betrayed his controlled opposition nature in serving to boost Hillary’s numbers among Blacks, which were reportedly as low as 82 per cent in this recent poll, compared to 93 per cent for Obama in 2012, and also above 90% for Bill Clinton. It makes no sense, otherwise, because Obama wasn’t running for re-election and Trump was otherwise undermining his credibility as a decisive person in previously saying the matter was settled based on the long-form certificate.

Having said all that, I think that Trump’s corporate tax policy is the right way to go, of lowering the top rate to 15%, as it has already been pointed out that with various write-offs that particularly large multi-national corporations get, the effective rate is only around 18%. That would level the playing field for the smaller corporations and bring a big chunk of the estimated $2 trillion in offshore or uninvested money back to the U.S. and re-invested.

And for potential Supreme Court appointments, this is where Hillary would do the most damage, in appointing Justices in the mould of those Obama had appointed, who would continue their assault on the First, Second Amendment and Tenth Amendments, particularly, and read in false rights into the Ninth Amendment. On the other hand, Trump would appoint Justices in the line of Antonin Scalia, who would assault the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, in particular. On balance, Trump’s appointments would be crucially important, and represent a basis by itself of choosing Trump over Hillary.

And with his immigration plan, Trump is absolutely right to say enough is enough with illegal immigration, and to call them illegal immigrants and not undocumented workers. It is very revealing when mass media outlets actually try to justify the continued presence of over 11 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. by pointing to the most successful among them and decrying as racist when some citations are made of the worst and most criminal among them.

After sending a private e-mail to someone in a discussion group who was supportive of Trump after he had made his official campaign announcement, and pointing out that I considered him to be controlled opposition, I’ve said very little, except for some online comments here and there, as it is ultimately my opinion about Trump’s candidacy and most people have scarcely been exposed to witnessing first-hand controlled opposition and sneaky tactics that I witnessed in researching and exposing the AIDS scam.

Just when there was evidently big support for an anti-establishment candidate, as seen from Bernie Sanders’ and Trump’s subsequent candidacies, Trump springs up on the scene as a big saviour. Fulfilling his role, Trump said so much that the White working class and other groups who have been getting the shaft by globalization and the mass media, have wanted to hear, and it is Trump’s billionaire status that left him uniquely able to claim that he couldn’t be bought and controlled by corporate special interests in the same way that all other major candidates have and would have to be, including two-time President, Barack Obama.

Pat Buchanan, on the other hand, I regard as a legitimate opposition figure back in 1992, and would’ve been far better than Trump on policy, not even allowing NAFTA to get off the ground. The very fact that he didn’t ultimately get the Republican presidential nomination — despite winning the New Hampshire primary and challenging a later, very unpopular George H.W. Bush — is strong evidence to me that he had legitimate intentions and purely grass-roots backing, unlike Trump.

Despite Trump being intended as controlled opposition to elect Hillary, I have no doubt that his backers (and Hillary’s, being the same), would be fully willing to accept him as a back-up candidate, and the great news is that if he somehow does win, it will become manifestly evident once you know which clues to look for, that he is controlled opposition, once he has spent enough time in office. Whether it is a matter of him assaulting the Fourth and Fifth Amendments in a way that even Bush couldn’t, or whether Washington will be more gridlocked than ever, or that he may even be impeached and removed from office, his intent will later become obvious.

I have to admit that I was somewhat shocked when he won the Republican nomination after facing a lot of initial resistance. But on the other hand, what good was he to Hillary if he didn’t? They had other candidates they could’ve used either to get her elected or win it for the Republicans with a neocon candidate like Jeb Bush, though they would’ve had to use more tricks. It was then that I thought that Trump could be intended to win as later controlled opposition as President, because he was no loser on The Apprentice. But then I was dissuaded from seeing that as a likely outcome by the fact that he would be okay in simply running standard controlled opposition for the sake of throwing the election to Hillary for the same reason that Bill Gates had no interest in running for President, which is that he wouldn’t have the power to order people around like he does in business.

One really good service Trump did, despite serving as controlled opposition, was to expose the American and even Canadian mass media as generally radical Left-leaning scoundrels with all the low-brow, disingenuous, politically-motivated and beauty pageant attacks against him as opposed to a critical comparison of his policies compared to Clinton’s.

If I were an American citizen, I wouldn’t vote for Trump, due to regarding him as controlled opposition, which is a shame, since on policy balance, he wins for me hands-down. May the American people make the right judgment today, and see you all on the flip side.

What a great way to discredit legitimate opposition to the Islamization of Europe and the protests of Germans in particular, against it.

While the organizer of the PEGIDA movement (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West), Lutz Bachmann, originally said the picture of him posing as Hitler was intended as a joke, only to quickly step down, I say it was a great way to discredit legitimate opposition while posing as a serious leader. Germany’s Deputy Chancellor said Bachmann is either “an idiot or a Nazi,” but he left out the third, and I’d say more likely, possibility — controlled opposition.

We see then, how the promotion of Austrian economics is big business, and why its associates and founder, Lew Rockwell, are limited in what positions they will take on certain issues.

For example, Lew Rockwell and Tom Woods, if they even bother addressing it, still promote the official government conspiracy theory that 19 Arab-Muslim hijackers pulled off 9/11, despite the evidence put forward by some brave, but few, true anarcho-capitalists like Nathan Fraser of Live Free FM, or Onebornfree.

It is for this reason that Anthony Migchels, a true monetary reformer, pointed out that the Truth Movement was co-opted by the End the Fed movement, led prominently by Austrian School supporters, and that Tom Woods, specifically, has been at the forefront, in claiming to be anti-government, yet steering clear of truly controversial issues that would affect their lucrative business operations.

For those who still don’t realize the significance of an organization whose ideology is anti-government specifically seeking government recognition and regulation, let me explain it.

It’s not, as someone said in another thread, comparable to an individual American doing anything he or she can to reduce his/her taxes.

Unlike the Mises Institute, the average American taxpayer is being directly taxed whether they consent or not.

Another excuse is the red herring of which of us hasn’t taken government services, which again, fails to recognize the distinction between the acceptance of goods and services provided by force and coercion, and voluntarily entering into a legally-binding contract with government, thereby accepting its authority.

Yet, I expect most defenders of the Mises Institute not to see any problems with this, which is a reason why the Austrian School will continue to serve as controlled opposition.

“First hour guest, editor of Veterans Today, Gordon Duff, talked about a report of a combined fleet operation between the U.S. and China against an alleged unfriendly ET threat. According to Duff, aliens in underwater bases planned to call their motherships in and seize the entire Pacific basin, not unlike what was depicted in the movie Independence Day. Further, Duff said that the Majestic 12 documents were real, and various treaties were established with alien visitors. He also spoke about how the US has spent trillions of dollars developing advanced weaponry and technology, unknown to the public– one of his sources claimed America had built an interstellar craft as far back as 1972.“

His appearance came just four days after being a guest on the Mike Harris Show on Republic Broadcasting, where he said:

“About 30% of what’s on Veterans Today is patently false. About 40% of what I write is at least purposely partially false, because if I didn’t write false information, I wouldn’t be alive.“